The pardon, retroactive to Jan. 1, 2014, addresses “any offenses” Fauci committed during this period, including in his former capacities as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, member of the White House COVID-19 Response Team and chief medical adviser to Biden.
In the final minutes of his administration, former President Joe Biden preemptively pardoned Dr. Anthony Fauci, in what The New York Times called “an extraordinary effort by an outgoing president to derail political prosecutions by an incoming president.”
The pardon, retroactive to Jan. 1, 2014, addresses “any offenses” Fauci committed during this period, including in his former capacities as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, member of the White House COVID-19 Response Team and chief medical adviser to Biden.
Fauci told The Hill he will accept the pardon.
“Issuance of these pardons should not be mistaken as an acknowledgment that any individual engaged in any wrongdoing, nor should acceptance be misconstrued as an admission of guilt for any offense,” Biden said, according to ABC News. “Our nation owes these public servants a debt of gratitude for their tireless commitment to our country.”
Biden said the pardon was a response to “exceptional circumstances” within which public servants like Fauci “have been subjected to ongoing threats and intimidation for faithfully discharging their duties.”
“Even when individuals have done nothing wrong — and in fact have done the right thing — and will ultimately be exonerated, the mere fact of being investigated or prosecuted can irreparably damage reputations and finances,” Biden said, according to the Times.
Preemptive pardons aren’t unprecedented, but they’re rare, said Children’s Health Defense CEO Mary Holland. Holland questioned the need for a preemptive pardon, given that there hasn’t been a criminal investigation or any criminal conviction.
Trump responds to ‘disgraceful’ pardons
In a response shared via text message with ABC News, President Donald Trump called Biden’s pardons, which also included several members of his family, “disgraceful.”
According to Reuters, Trump said the pardons make the recipients “look very guilty.” Trump’s deputy chief of staff for communications and personnel said the pardons “will go down as the greatest attack on America’s justice system in history.”
Naomi Wolf, Ph.D., journalist and CEO of Daily Clout called the Fauci pardon “shocking and entirely predictable.” She said it constitutes “evidence of Biden’s awareness of Fauci’s criminal behavior and actions.”
Wolf, author of “The Pfizer Papers: Pfizer’s Crimes Against Humanity,” said the pardon also “raises serious questions about Biden’s complicity in many medical murders.”
Several of Fauci’s alleged medical crimes were listed in a statement by the Independent Medical Alliance — formerly the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance. These include coercing millions of people into getting the COVID-19 vaccines and discouraging the use of alternative treatments such as ivermectin, and collaborating with social media platforms to censor posts questioning the vaccines.
“The entire world is asking why Anthony Fauci needed a pardon if he’s supposedly done nothing wrong,” Independent Medical Alliance spokesperson Lynne Kristensen said in the statement. “In fact, Fauci led the ivory-tower medical establishment in a shameful COVID response that served as a wake-up call to front-line doctors across the globe.”
Rutgers University molecular biologist Richard Ebright, Ph.D., a frequent critic of gain-of-function research, said Fauci’s pardon was backdated to 2014 because that year “is the start date of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant that funded the reckless research in Wuhan, China, that caused COVID.”
“Fauci violated federal policies on gain-of-function research and enhanced potential pandemic pathogen research, committed conspiracy to defraud and perjury, used federal funds to commit crimes and caused a pandemic that killed 20 million and cost $25 trillion,” Ebright told The Defender. “The pardon is a travesty.”
Fauci told ABC News he was grateful for Biden’s pardon.
“I really truly appreciate the action President Biden has taken today on my behalf,” Fauci said. “Let me be perfectly clear … I have committed no crime, you know that, and there are no possible grounds for any allegation or threat of criminal investigation or prosecution of me.”
But for Jeffrey Tucker, director of the Brownstone Institute, “The pardoning of Fauci might help him personally now and he appears grateful. But it also cements in the public mind the worst-possible perception of his work and legacy.”
Ebright cited U.S. Supreme Court precedent. “The law of the land is absolutely clear. The Supreme Court ruled in Burdick v. United States, in 1915, that acceptance of a pardon implies an acknowledgment of guilt.”